451 lines
20 KiB
TeX
451 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-5-recognition}{%
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\chapter{Recognition}\label{chapter-5-recognition}}
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\epigraph{``The essence of sorcery is blasphemy. Through will and power,
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every mage usurps dominion over the laws of Creation from the gods Above
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and Below.''}{Extract from ``The Most Noble Art of Magic'', by Dread Emperor
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Sorcerous}
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Hakram's sword swung clear of its scabbard, joined by mine a heartbeat
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later.
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What had the godsdamned Warlock let loose? Hopefully it was just a
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devil, because if the mages had managed to bring a demon through this
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was going to get unpleasant. Barrelling through the window a burly shape
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landed a few feet in front of me, shaking off shards of glass. Dark eyes
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glared at me balefully and the pig let out a plaintive oink, flapping
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its dainty little wings.
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``What,'' I asked, ever the soul of wit.
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``Masego,'' a man's voice thundered. ``Get that thing back in its cage
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and fireproof the locks this time.''
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``\emph{What},'' I repeated, watching in horror as the pig opened a maw
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filled with teeth and turned towards me.
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I barely had time to curse and huddle behind my heater shield before the
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thing belched out a stream of flame. I heard Hakram duck away from the
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danger, flipping over a table as he did, but my instincts had not been
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so evasive. Heat and the reek of brimstone licked the edges of my shield
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-- I wasn't singed, but it was enough to make me think I should perhaps
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reconsider my habit of not wearing a helmet outside of the battlefield.
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The flames guttered out after a moment and I moved forward. Of all the
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perils I'd anticipated when making my way to the bastion, I had to admit
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that a fire-breathing winged pig hadn't been one of them. What was the
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point of the bloody wings, anyway? They were way too small to allow the
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creature to actually fly.
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\emph{Oh Gods, am I really at a place in my life where I'm going to
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actually duel a jail-breaking pig?} Before I could test exactly how hard
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the thing's hide was, the door to the workshop burst open and a man
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hissed out an incantation, throwing his hand towards the pig: a muzzle
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of ice formed itself around the creature's mouth and it let out a muted
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squeal of panic. It tried to make a run for it but the ice spread in
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slender but solid lines across its body, restraining its feet in solid
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manacles that stopped it within moments. The little abomination wiggled
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impotently in front of me, its wings still beating in panic but
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seemingly incapable of raising its own weight. The man sighed.
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``Of course the little bastard gets out just before we get company,'' he
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complained. ``You'd be Lady Squire, I take it?''
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I nodded slowly, sheathing my sword after a moment. The stranger was
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tall, even for a Soninke, but where I'd become used to rubbing shoulders
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with soldiers thick with corded muscle this one was built like a
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scholar. His hair was long and split in a dozen braids threaded with
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trinkets of silver and precious stones, many reflecting light in
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unnatural ways. The grey robes he was decked in went all the way to his
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ankles, covered with a leather apron whose pockets were filled with
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tools I didn't recognize. The man -- boy, I corrected mentally, as for
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all his height he couldn't have been more than a year older than me --
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was rather plain, for a Named. Thick eyebrows and dark brown eyes were
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half-hidden by a pair of spectacles, his lips were fleshy and from the
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looks of it he bit them often. \emph{Though I suppose after Malicia most
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everyone looks plain.} I managed to get my thoughts in order before the
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silence became awkward.
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``That's me,'' I agreed. ``And you'd be\ldots{}''
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I let the sentence dangle, unsure as to what the protocol was here. I'd
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heard his father call out what I assumed what his name, but I'd been
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taught that it could be rude to refer to an individual with a Role by
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anything but their Name without being invited to do so.
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``Apprentice,'' the boy introduced himself with a half-smile. ``But you
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can call me Masego.''
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``Catherine,'' I replied easily. ``And supervising that poor table
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behind me is Adjutant Hakram of the Fifteenth.''
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Apprentice nodded in my officer's direction, then frowned. He pushed up
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his spectacles and stared at the orc for a long moment.
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``Huh,'' he spoke thoughtfully.
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I raised an eyebrow. ``Is there a problem?''
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``Adjutant,'' the Soninke muttered. ``That's a new one.''
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I blinked. ``The rank's been around for a while, actually,'' I replied
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slowly.
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``Probably,'' Apprentice shrugged. ``I have, however, never heard of it
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turning into a Name before.''
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\emph{What?} I turned to glance at Hakram, who seemed just as surprised
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as I was.
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``I'm an orc, sir,'' my officer spoke carefully. ``We don't really do
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the Name thing.''
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Masego clicked his tongue against the roof of his mouth in disapproval.
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``Inaccurate,'' he chided Hakram. ``Names were fairly common in the
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Steppes before the Miezan occupation.''
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``That's the better part of two thousand years ago,'' I replied flatly.
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The Apprentice seemed utterly indifferent to that fact, much to my
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irritation.
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``It's still nascent in form,'' the Soninke noted. ``If it makes you
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feel any better, you might get yourself killed before it turns into
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anything concrete.''
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It was becoming apparent that social skills were not one of Masego's no
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doubt plentiful talents. Still, this had \emph{implications}. I'd never
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heard of an Adjutant before and that was a little worrying, but there
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was also the fact that for the first time in a millennia and a half a
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greenskin was coming into a Role. That was\ldots{} shit, the political
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ramifications of this alone went way above my head. Black always said
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that Names were a reflection of the people they sprang from: was
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something changing with the orcs, or was this about my own burgeoning
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influence? \emph{This is about the Reforms, has to be.} But why was the
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Role appearing here and now instead of forty years ago, when they'd
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first been implemented? Gods, this was going to be such a headache. I
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cast another look at Hakram and he seemed more troubled than elated at
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the news. Evidently I wasn't the only realizing how much of a mess this
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could turn into.
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``I'll look into it,'' I reassured him. ``We'll figure this out.''
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The tall orc nodded, carefully. I was about to ask Masego how he even
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knew this when the voice from the workshop broke in again.
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``Masego,'' the Warlock called out. ``Is the specimen secure?''
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The Apprentice eyed the pig and sighed. ``It's not going anywhere,
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Father.''
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``Then get it back in its cage,'' the Warlock ordered peevishly. ``And
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bring our guests in, we're not savages.''
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Masego muttered a few syllables under his breath, gestured peremptorily
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with his hand and the pig rose in the air. It managed to drift a few
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feet towards the corridor by beating its wings but before it could
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escape it was yanked towards the workshop by an unseen force, squealing
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in dismay all the while.
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``I have to ask,'' I spoke as we made our way to the back. ``What the
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Hells is going on with that pig?''
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Apprentice's eyes lit up with enthusiasm. ``We're attempting to
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determine whether Demiurgian phenomena are caused by an original or a
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creational law. So far it seems to be original, but we'll need to repeat
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the experiment with greater drift separation.''
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``I see,'' I lied. ``So the wings and the fire?''
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I left the sentence unfinished, hoping he'd take the bait and provide an
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explanation in less technical terms.
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``The pattern woven under the skin was a levitation one,'' Masego
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explained. ``The wings were\ldots{} unexpected. When we pumped more
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power into the specimen to see if it was just a temporary manifestation
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it developed the fire-breathing.''
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``And that's\ldots{} normal, by your standards?'' I asked, keeping my
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face carefully blank.
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The mage looked mildly amused. ``Hardly the strangest thing I've seen.
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And if this pattern is repeatable, it has interesting connotations
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concerning the nature of dragons. After all they're-``
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``She's not a practitioner, Masego. Your babble is wasted on her,'' the
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Warlock's voice interrupted fondly as we stepped into the workshop.
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I had to confess I'd been rather curious as to what the personal
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workshop of a man who was among the five greatest mages in Calernia
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would look like. If the preaching in the House of Light was any
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indication it'd be filled to the brim with demons and other various
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blasphemies, but I'd learned to take what the Brothers and Sisters of my
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childhood taught with a grain of salt. The sprawling piles of old
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manuscripts that covered half the room weren't unexpected, but truth
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compelled me to admit that the tall windows were -- a quick look told me
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that the view through them was in flat defiance of common sense: through
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one of them I could see Ater sprawled out in the distance, through
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another what seemed to be the skyline of an entirely different Praesi
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city. There were seven tall glass panels and every one of them
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overlooked a different sight, many of them separated by over a month's
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worth of travelling.
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Stone shelves full of glassware flanked the windows, some empty and
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others filled with colourful liquids or dark shapes. The entire left
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half of the workshop was covered in cages of various sizes, most of them
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empty. The wrought iron bars were covered in runes and I glimpsed the
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silhouette of a hound made of smoke napping quietly inside one. The cage
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where the errant pig had been kept was easy to find, the iron lock
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keeping the door closed half-melted on the ground before it. I might
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have spent longer taking in the sights if someone hadn't cleared their
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throat -- I pushed down an embarrassed blush and my eyes turned to the
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source of the noise.
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``And so we finally meet, Catherine Foundling,'' the Sovereign of the
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Red Skies smiled.
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I had to push down another blush, much to my dismay. Where Masego was
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plain, the Warlock was anything but. His skin was a little darker than
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his son's and they were of height, but that was where the resemblance
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ended. I could have compared the man to the fishermen boys I'd known in
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Laure and the way living in the water had granted them a swimmer's
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physique, but there was nothing boyish about the Warlock. His hair was
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cut short and showed some streaks of silver, though not as many as his
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close-cropped salt and pepper beard -- the combination made him look
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rather distinguished, in an older man sort of way. His robes were a
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tasteful shade of burgundy trimmed with gold, tightened at the waist by
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a belt of soft leather in a way that showed off the broadness of his
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chest and shoulders. \emph{Don't gawk, Catherine. He's a least thrice
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your age and plays for the other side anyway.} That said, I could
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definitely see how the Calamity had managed to talk an incubus into
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marriage.
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``Lord Warlock,'' I coughed out. ``Well met.''
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The man in question smirked but passed no comment, Masego sighing as he
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passed him by and pushed the floating pig back in its cage. The
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distraction allowed me to get my thoughts in order and I gestured
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towards Hakram.
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``Adjutant Hakram of the Fifteenth,'' I introduced him.
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The Calamity cocked his head to the side, examining the orc.
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``Howling Wolves?'' he asked in Kharsum.
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``On my mother's side,'' Hakram acknowledged in the same. ``Weeping
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Stone on my father's.''
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Warlock grinned, displaying a set of remarkably white teeth.
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``They won't be able to sweep you under the rug if you have kinship in
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Grem's clan. Someone in Ater is going to have a \emph{fit} when word
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spreads.''
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He sounded pretty gleeful at the prospect. I kept my face pleasant but
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made a mental note of it. Of all the Calamities I'd met not a single one
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had ever spoken fondly of the Praesi nobility. Was that because they'd
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had so much pushback from them on their way up, or was there more to it?
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``We were hoping to keep the word un-spread, for a little while,'' I
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spoke up, meeting the man's eyes squarely.
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``Ah, youth,'' the Warlock mused. ``It'll get out, Squire. It always
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does, and the tighter you grasp it between your fingers the more
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violently it will burst out.''
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I squared my jaw and prepared myself for an argument with a man best
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known for incinerating the better part of a thousand men on the Fields
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of Streges. Still, there was nothing for it. I wasn't going to allow
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Hakram to be a target, not before we had a better idea of what his
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situation involved and who would be coming after him.
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``I'll remain discreet, no need for that look on your face,'' the
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Calamity chuckled. ``That statement was meant in a broader sense.''
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I frowned. ``Could have made that a little clearer,'' I pointed out.
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Masego snorted from the other side of the room, where he was fitting in
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a new lock.
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``This coming from a pupil of Uncle Amadeus?'' he said. ``The man can't
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pass a dish without turning it into something ominously cryptic.''
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Well, he wasn't wrong. ``I've been wondering whether it's a Name thing
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or he just can't help himself,'' I admitted.
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Warlock smirked. ``He was already like that at sixteen,'' the Calamity
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replied. ``Ranger used to throw cutlery at him every time he got too
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dramatic.''
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The image got a smile out of me. With a pair of incantations, Masego
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clicked the lock shut and released the spell on the pig before claiming
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a stool by one of the handful of work tables spread across the room. His
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father nodded in approval before turning his attention to us.
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``To business, then,'' the man spoke, and it was enough to sober the
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amusement right out of my system.
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``I'm guessing this is about the situation in the city,'' I grunted.
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``As it happens, I had a few questions myself about your involvement.''
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\emph{Or lack thereof}, I added silently. The Warlock hummed in
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agreement and passed a hand over a few runes carved into the table where
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Masego had claimed a seat. The eldritch letters shimmered and small
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globes of light rose out of them, spreading and taking shape until a
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facsimile of Summerholm seen from above had formed over the table's
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length. The construct was white but some parts of it were shaded darker,
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mostly parts of the city that even my still-fresh military judgement
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understood to be key military positions. The defensive wards General
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Afolabi's envoy had mentioned, if I had to guess.
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``There are a least four heroes in Summerholm as we speak,'' Warlock
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announced.
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I raised an eyebrow. ``The messenger from the Twelfth mentioned less.''
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``The General hasn't been informed,'' Masego murmured.
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My eyes flicked to the Calamity. ``I'm sure there's a good reason for
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that.''
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Warlock smiled unpleasantly. ``General Afolabi's staff meetings are a
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leaking sieve.''
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I'd been about to point out it was pretty unlikely any Praesi soldiers
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would willingly betray the Legions to locals when I realized that was
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rather missing the point. That was the Imperial way of thinking, and
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while it had its uses I'd not forgotten where I came from.
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\emph{Servants, merchants, anyone with business in the Comital Palace.}
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Nobles from the Wasteland had this nasty tendency to see their
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attendants as moving furniture -- it might not even have occurred to
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Afolabi that they could be eavesdropping when he met with his officers.
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``You've been unable to locate them?'' I asked instead.
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``They have a Named capable of sorcery with them,'' Warlock spoke,
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distaste thick in his tone. ``Their work is singularly incompetent, but
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they struck gold seemingly by accident -- they botched their working and
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instead of blocking my scrying they've managed to set up a pattern that
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redirects the divination elsewhere.''
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I raised an eyebrow. ``You're sure it was an accident? It seems like a
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fairly clever counter.''
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Masego snorted and Warlock scoffed. ``It only worked because I'd
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tailored my spell to sketch out the edges of the zone where scrying was
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blocked,'' the Calamity explained impatiently. ``Against a more common
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variant of the working it would have failed miserably. That kind of
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triumph through incompetence is the signature of Bumbling Conjurers.''
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Urgh, those. At least Bards were funny. The Bumbling types attracted
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failure like honey did flies, only ever managing to survive by the skin
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of their teeth with a heavy dose of luck. \emph{Though can it really be
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called luck if having it is part of your Role?}
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``So we have a band of heroes prowling about Summerholm with impunity,''
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I grunted. ``It seems to me that if you'd left the bastion you might
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have managed to thin them out a bit.''
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That was as close to outright asking the Warlock why he'd been holed up
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in his tower all this time while the city went to the dogs as I was
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willing to go, for now. Insolence could get results and I'd learned to
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harness my natural proclivity for it to my advantage, but when it came
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to Calamities it was better to start out treading lightly. The man
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brushed aside the implied question.
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``Why do you think the heroes are in Summerholm?'' he asked.
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I raised an eyebrow. ``If the Empire loses the city its supply lines are
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cut. The Legions will either have to live off the land, which brings
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recruits to the rebels, or set up a vulnerable backup with boats through
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the Hwaerte that can be targeted.''
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Warlock rolled his eyes, the gesture surprisingly youthful. ``You're
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thinking like a general. The Lone Swordsman is a killer, not a
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strategist. Think like what you actually are: the Squire.''
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I passed a hand through my hair, frowning. The Swordsman wasn't really
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the one calling the shots in the Liesse Rebellion -- Imperial
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intelligence had the Countess Marchford as the real power in the
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movement -- but Warlock was correct in thinking that didn't mean the
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heroes had come here on her orders. \emph{So what does Summerholm have
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that other Callowan cities don't?} The unrest here wasn't anything that
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couldn't be stirred up in Laure, and there were more citizens there to
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use as soldiers. If the target wasn't the city itself, then what was it?
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After a long moment, my eyes turned to the Calamity.
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``You think they're after you,'' I spoke quietly.
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Warlock smiled thinly. ``I'm quite sure of it. And that is why neither I
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nor Masego are gallivanting through the streets in a hero hunt. That
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would be playing right into their hands.''
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I closed my eyes. ``And that's why they're being borderline villainous
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in assassinating officers,'' I understood. ``They're trying to draw you
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out by making the situation untenable.''
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There was a moment of silence and I noticed Masego was staring at me in
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surprise.
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``What?'' I asked, suddenly self-conscious.
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``I did not expect you to take such a dim view of the Lone Swordsman's
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actions,'' the Apprentice admitted.
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``I'm wearing legionary armour,'' I replied tiredly. ``How much more
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obvious can I make my allegiances?''
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The younger Soninke waved away the comment. ``I don't mean in that
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sense,'' Masego replied. ``The Lone Swordsman's actions, while brutal,
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are not something I'd consider entirely unjustified.''
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I bit my tongue on the reply that the Heavens would fall before I took a
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morality lesson from a Praesi, of all people.
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``He's assassinating and torturing people, Apprentice,'' I retorted.
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``That's not exactly classic heroics.''
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``He's targeting military personnel only,'' Masego noted. ``And while I
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suppose torture is somewhat reprehensible-'' I raised an eyebrow at the
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`somewhat' ``- given that the Empire employs it as an information
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extraction method itself, it's hard to throw stones on the subject.
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Using all means available to resist a foreign occupation isn't something
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I'd call villainous.''
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``A hero's supposed to be more than a villain fighting for the opposite
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cause,'' I replied. ``If he has no moral high ground to stand on, then
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what the Hells are all his followers fighting for?''
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The Warlock cleared his throat. ``While I'm sure hearing two teenagers
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debating the ins and outs of morality would be a fascinating experience,
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there are other priorities at play.''
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He seemed more amused than anything else, so I took the dismissal in
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stride. Masego looked like he wanted to continue the conversation, and
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to be honest I was rather inclined to indulge him. It would be pleasant,
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to have someone my age to talk about these things with. Hakram was the
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closest thing I had to a confidant in the Legion, but the orc take on
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ethics was\ldots{} well, the less said about it the better. Using
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martial strength as your primary virtue had a way of affecting your
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other values. \emph{Speaking of the devil}, I thought as my adjutant
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cleared his throat.
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``Our entry into the city was the opposite of quiet,'' Hakram gravelled.
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``They're bound to react to another villain entering the city.''
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The Calamity smiled. ``Precisely,'' he agreed. ``And I think I know when
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and where they'll strike.''
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The man's finger tapped the facsimile silhouette of the Comital Palace.
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``I believe you received an invitation to dine with General Afolabi
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tonight,'' he said.
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I rubbed the bridge of my nose. What did it say about me that every time
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I went to a dinner party it was with the intent of getting someone
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stabbed?
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